Visionary Leader, CEO, Chairman - Governing Board, Founder and Chancellor of Biblical University
Ask Chuck: Does God Want Me to Be Rich?
Dear Chuck,
I
find the conflicting messages among well known preachers and financial
experts confusing when it comes to whether I should expect to do well
financially if I am in God's will and following His plan. You turn on
the television, and many of the most popular preachers insist that good
times are ahead for the faithful. Are they?
Pondering Prosperity
Dear Pondering,
There
are a lot of financial teachers, preachers and gurus in the world
today! It is good to be skeptical about who you should be listening to
as each has a very different financial and biblical philosophy.
You
are certainly not alone if you are confused. "How much do I deserve?"
is a question most people ponder throughout their working life. It's an
age-old concern to really know what you are worth and what to
financially expect of or from God.
Rather than a blanket statement
that you do or do not deserve riches, the answer from a Christian
perspective requires an examination of God's perspective.
Our True Identity
First, we deserve nothing at all.
Romans
6:23 reminds us what we have actually earned: "For the wages of sin is
death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."
And
yet, God judges that you are worth the very sacrifice of Jesus Christ
himself. He offers us all of Himself plus eternal life.
In Romans
8:31-32 we read, "If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did
not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all — how will he not
also, along with him, graciously give us all things?"
So, our true
identity is that of being adopted as God's child who has such extreme
worth that Jesus rescued us from our rightful condemnation under the
penalty of our sin by His priceless mercy and grace. But that does not
mean we will be materially made rich as some TV preachers might
proclaim.
Two Extreme Financial Teachings
Next,
there are two extreme financial teachings in Christian camps today: the
Prosperity Gospel and the Poverty Gospel. I believe both are wrong.
Those who
believe that riches are a sign of God's blessing advance what is
commonly referred to as the Prosperity Gospel. This teaches that you can
command God to prosper you financially, that when you give you can
expect a larger financial increase in return, and that your spending can
be extravagant and carefree. This false theology is in contradiction to
the many Scriptural warnings against greed, selfishness, coveting,
idolatry, and the love of money.
Luke 16:14-15: "The Pharisees,
who loved money, heard all this and were sneering at Jesus. He said to
them, 'You are the ones who justify yourselves in the eyes of others,
but God knows your hearts. What people value highly is detestable in
God's sight.'"
First Timothy 6:10: "For the love of money is a
root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money, have wandered
from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs."
You
should be on your guard to identify and reject the teachings of the
Prosperity Gospel as well as the other extreme, the Poverty Gospel. This
false teaching claims that money and possessions are evil, that rich
people are greedy and sinful, that being poor makes you more righteous
in God's eyes, and that spending brings guilt and condemnation.
Proverbs 30:8 instructs us not to seek poverty or riches. "Keep falsehood and lies far from me; give me neither poverty nor riches, but give me only my daily bread."
The
Bible never condemns wealth and neither should we. The Bible never
upholds poverty as the pathway to righteousness, nor should we.
We can know that the presence or absence of money is not the way we measure God's blessing.
"Rich and poor have this in common: The LORD is the Maker of them all," notes Proverbs 22:2.
In Hebrews 11,
often called the Faith Hall of Fame, you can read of heroes and
martyrs, rich and poor, who made up the fabric of our Christian history.
What made them distinctive were not their bank accounts, but how they
used their opportunities to further the work of God on earth and how
well they followed through on what God asked of them. In fact, of those
who suffered the most, the scripture says in verse 38, "The world was
not worthy of them."
We are Stewards
Many people wonder what the Bible does say about money and possessions if the Prosperity and Poverty theologies are both wrong. The Bible is full of financial wisdom — in fact, over two-thirds of Jesus' parables involved money!
Scripture makes it clear that God is the Owner of all things (Psalm 24:1), that we are His stewards (Matthew 25:14-30) and that we are called to be faithful — regardless if we have a lot or a little (1 Corinthians 4:2).
As
stewards of God's money, we are called to work hard, to manage well, to
be cheerful givers and to spend cautiously. We will not be judged by
the amount we accumulate or by whether or not our peers saw us as
successful.
Remember Who Makes the True Judgment of Your Worth
When you are tempted to value your success in dollars, remember what Jesus said in Mark 12 about
the woman who gave her last pennies to the work of God. "Truly I tell
you, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others.
They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in
everything — all she had to live on."
Faithful stewardship
is not about ordering your finances in a way you can spend whatever you
want. It's about positioning your heart in a way that God can spend you
however He wants. God sees your heart and values your gift — not for its size but for the love you show with it.
With
a careful financial plan in place, fueled by hard work and discipline,
you may achieve more financially than you ever dreamed possible. Or you
may be asked to live a life of frugality where God's strength is
revealed in your weakness. Our primary question should not be
how much money does God want us to have, but what kind of witness does
He want us to be with our resources? Get inspired by the testimony God is building into your life and enjoy the blessings He sends your way.